EMPLOYEES INTALCO ALUMINUM v. Employment

114 P.3d 675, 128 Wash. App. 121
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 13, 2005
Docket54772-1-I, 54870-1-I, 54871-9-I
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 114 P.3d 675 (EMPLOYEES INTALCO ALUMINUM v. Employment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
EMPLOYEES INTALCO ALUMINUM v. Employment, 114 P.3d 675, 128 Wash. App. 121 (Wash. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

114 P.3d 675 (2005)

EMPLOYEES OF INTALCO ALUMINUM CORP., et al, Respondents/Cross Appellants,
v.
EMPLOYMENT SECURITY DEPARTMENT OF the STATE OF WASHINGTON, Appellant/Cross Respondent.

Nos. 54772-1-I, 54870-1-I, 54871-9-I.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

June 13, 2005.

*676 Mary Barrett, Attorney General's Office, Olympia, WA, Louis A. Falcone, Attorney at Law, Seattle, WA., for Appellants.

Catherine M. Cabalo, Brandt Law Group, Seattle, WA, for Respondents.

*677 ELLINGTON, A.C.J.

¶ 1 Employees who accepted voluntary severance packages were denied unemployment benefits. Because there was no written layoff announcement and the employer did not take the final action to grant the severance, the employees do not qualify for benefits under the employer-initiated layoff rule. The employees' acceptance of voluntary severance did not constitute good cause to quit. The employees are therefore disqualified from benefits. We reverse the superior court and reinstate the commissioner's ruling denying benefits.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 In response to power shortages and rapidly rising energy prices, the Bonneville Power Administration reached an agreement with Intalco Aluminum Corporation under which Intalco agreed to a temporary reduction in its power allotment. This resulted in a plan to halt aluminum production at Intalco's Ferndale smelter for two years, from October 1, 2001 through September 30, 2003. The BPA in return agreed to pay Intalco for not using the curtailed power.

¶ 3 To address the production halt, Intalco reached an agreement with the union representing its production and maintenance workers whereby 24 employees with less than two years' seniority would be laid off, the remaining employees would be paid their base rate of pay during the shutdown, and Intalco would offer voluntary severance programs to all hourly employees.

¶ 4 Intalco sent a memorandum to hourly employees announcing three voluntary severance programs (voluntary severance, early retirement, and furlough), advising that any employee could elect to participate in one of the programs during a six-week sign-up period. An employee who elected one of the programs had seven days thereafter to change his or her mind. Intalco did not reserve the right to reject an employee's election. Of 930 employees, 280 elected to accept one of the programs and terminate their employment with Intalco.

¶ 5 After accepting the voluntary severance program, 48 employees applied for unemployment benefits. The Employment Security Department (the Department) denied benefits on grounds that the employees voluntarily terminated their employment. An administrative law judge (ALJ) from the Office of Administrative Hearings affirmed the Department's decision, and that ruling was affirmed by the commissioner.

¶ 6 One employee appealed to Thurston County Superior Court, and the other 47 appealed to Whatcom County Superior Court. Both superior courts reversed the Department and granted benefits. Division Two reversed the Thurston County Superior Court case and reinstated the commissioner's decision.[1] We now consider the appeal from Whatcom County.

ANALYSIS

¶ 7 Standard of Review. The findings of a commissioner are reviewed under chapter 34.04 RCW, the Administrative Procedure Act.[2] The appellate court reviews the findings and decision of the commissioner, not the superior court decision or the underlying ALJ order.[3] This review is performed de novo.[4] The commissioner's decision is presumed prima facie correct and the petitioner has the burden of proving otherwise.[5]

¶ 8 Employer Initiated Lay-Off Rule. Generally, unemployed workers are eligible for benefits unless they are disqualified by statute.[6] A worker is disqualified if he or *678 she voluntarily leaves work without good cause.[7] One exception to this rule is the so-called employer initiated layoff rule, which provides that after a layoff has been announced, an employee may volunteer to be among those laid off, and still be eligible for benefits. The question is whether this exception applies here.

¶ 9 The employer initiated layoff rule is found in WAC 192-150-100:

(1) You will not be considered to have been separated from employment for a disqualifying reason when:
(a) Your employer takes the first action in the separation process by announcing in writing to its employees that:
(i) The employer plans to reduce its work force through a layoff or reduction in force, and
(ii) That employees can offer to be among those included in the layoff or reduction in force;
(b) You offer to be one of the employees included in the layoff or reduction in force; and
(c) Your employer takes the final action in the separation process by accepting your offer to be one of the employees included in the layoff or reduction in force, thereby ending your employment relationship.
(2) This section does not apply to situations where an employer modifies benefits or otherwise encourages early retirement or early separation, but the employer and the employee do not follow the steps in subsection (1)(a) through (c).

¶ 10 Division Two held that Broschart failed to establish two of the necessary requirements of WAC 192-150-100: written notice of layoffs (WAC 192-150-100(1)(a)(i)), and the employer's final action ending the employment (WAC 192-150-100(1)(c)).[8] We agree with Division Two's analysis and reach the same conclusion.

¶ 11 Written Notice. For employees to be eligible for benefits under the employer initiated layoff rule, the employer must take the first action in the separation process by announcing in writing its plans to reduce its work force through a layoff or reduction in force.[9] The requirement of a writing is recent. Former WAC 192-16-070 (1993) required only that the employer announce a layoff.[10] Conflicting interpretations of the former rule[11] led to an amendment in 2001, requiring that the layoff announcement be made in writing "to clarify that the regulation refers to formal offers from an employer, *679 not situations in which there is a potential for layoff at some unknown time."[12]

¶ 12 Nothing in the record constitutes a written layoff announcement from Intalco. The employees contend the word "reduction" in the "voluntary reduction options" documents and in internal memos amounts to a written announcement, pointing out that Intalco's employee relations administrator conceded it referred to a "reduction of [Intalco's] workforce."[13] But the documents and memos merely describe the three voluntary options, which were not layoffs,[14] and the phrase "reduction of the work force" described a "design [ ] to encourage people to take early severance or early retirement."[15] The voluntary severance options in fact achieved a reduction in the work force, but not by means of layoff. The documents were not the equivalent of a written layoff announcement.

¶ 13 The employees next argue that the commissioner added a new requirement that layoffs be "inevitable."[16] The commissioner took this language from the Department's explanatory statement regarding WAC 192-150-100.[17]

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Bluebook (online)
114 P.3d 675, 128 Wash. App. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/employees-intalco-aluminum-v-employment-washctapp-2005.